OCR Text |
Show " MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH X , A V ls i weekly p,,,.9ry Tli hrearms Festival N v v 1 : i , '' s , f V ) ' I "V " I ' " ' 1 i . i O The "farmers' guard" of Austria crack rifle-men from the mountain-ous Pongau area have no s, criminals or villains to shoot at these days but they keep in trim, as they have dur-ing the past 400 years. Way back in the lawless days of 1550, the cit-izenry of the region formed "r i f I e m e n' s g u i I d s" as protection against poachers, plun-- i derers and deserters from the private armies of the numerous dukes and barons. The years brought peace to the section but the riflemen, who had come to cherish their re- -i sponsibility and take pride in thpir prowess, re-- i mained organized. This year, which commemo-rates the 400th anniver-sary of the founding of the first guild, the small, quiet town of St. Johann, near Vienna, played host to the spectacle. Dressed in their quaint costumes (above) the people arrive for the festival. 0 Each group of riflemen repres-enting the various geographical districts of the province, is award-ed some sort of special citation to take home. Above a couple looks at an award. . fT. .A- - v r ? i ,.T ' ' - v 1 " i V 1 I i - Nil " I - I All' ' : ) :ifr ' I v- - A f i i ' ?l w , J I ,J ' - V" ' . 7 N,, Is f - s ". ' ' f ' ' i ' ' i 4 Ajum. utaiiJitA.ft' "-- ' ' . j. "j ' r " V K ' ; ' , f 1 if W,;;! 0 This oldtimer (above) has had his day with the rifle, but he's still strong enough to march and play in the band. i I The riflemen of M"rau (above), in their trditional fur hats, await Jeir turn to shoot with old rifles they bear. s the day progresses the heQt grows strong, but lth traditional Jor"ful of ale (right) on hH there's little chnce that anyone will So thirsty. Sampson the 6lant, combined scape- - Sot and mascot, is one cf 'he features of the col- - ''f"l parade climaxing ""Jay's activities. The tiva was witnessed by 2W spectators this year. It's Easy to Make This Useful Handsome Desk (DESK - " WITH ND UN C Desk Matches Shelf Units TT IS EASY to make this desk, also unit E in the upper sketch with pattern 272. Units A and B are made with pattern 270; C with 571. Patterns include actual-siz- e cutting guides for the curved shelves. Price of patterns is 25c each. WORKSHOP PATTERN SERVICE Drawer 10 Bedford Bills, New York. Now...to relieve I f t 5 distresswithout f 9V , dosing, rub on... W VAPpRUB WHEH SLEEP VOM'T COME AI1D YOU FEEL GLUm Use Chewing-Gu- m Laxative REMOVES WASTE. ..MOT GOOD FOOD When yoc can't sleep feel Just awful because you need a laxative do as MILLIONS dO CheW Is wonderfully different! Doctors sny many other laxatives, start their "flushing" action loo (toon risht In the iiomiuh. Large doses of such lax-atives upset digestion, flush away nour-ishing food you need for health and energy . you feel weak, worn out. But gentle taken as rec-ommended, works chiefly In the lower bowel where It removes only wiiNte, not good food I You avoid that weak, tired feeling. Use and feel in fine, full of life! 25, 50, or only I ri-- FAMOUS CHEWINC-CU- IAXAT1VE J44-- VJARFAE?S?1 KELLS U"" Mix a little Black Leaf f :'. Warfarin with corn meal or other bait. De-- j-stroys entire colonies ffpififlj of rats and mice. Taste- - AjUfWn less.odorless.neverde- - Jp velops "bait shyness." j jT" Sold at drug, hardware bTljl andfarmsupplystores. lr 4 Send for free Rat Con-tr- ol Circular "A". 0. .. jf Tobacco & Chen " leal Corp. Richmond, Va. Want to make a hit with all your smoking friends this Christmas? Here's what you do: Check-of- f the names of all your friends who smoke cigarettes. Give them a carton of Camels! Cool, mild Camels are a welcome gift to any smoker because more people smoke camels than any other cigar- ette' And for all your friends who smoke a pipe or roll their own cigarettes, give a big pound-ti- n of Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco! When you give a man Prince" Al-bert, you're giving him the real smoking pleasure. And when you go to your local dealer, to get the colorful Christmas pack-ages. Both Camels and Prince Albert are available in red and green packages in the spirit of the season. All you have to do is write your personal greeting on the built-i- n gift card on the package. Save time and money this Christ-wa- s by giving cool, mild Camels and mellow Prince Albert Smok-ing Tobacco. See your dealer to-day. Adv. Economical Cough Relief! Try This Home Mixture No Cooking. Makes Big Saving.' To get quick and satisfying relief from coughs due to colds, mix this recipe in your kitchen. First, make a syrup with 2 cups granu-lated sugar and one cup of water. No cooking needed. Or you can use corn syrup or liquid honey, instead of sugar syrup. Then get 214 ounces of Finex from any druggist. This is a special compound of proven ingredients, in concentrated form, for its quick action on throat and bronchial irritations. Put Pinex into a pint bottle, and fill up with your syrup. Thus you make a full pint of splendid' medicine about four times as much for your money. It never spoils, and) tastes fine. And for quick, blessed relief, it is surpris-ing. You can feel it take hold in a way that means business. It loosens phlegm, soothe irritated membranes, eases soreness. Makes breathing easy, and lets you get restful sleep. Just try it, and if not pleased, your money will be refunded. FOR EXTRA CONVENIENCE GET NEW PINEXI TbOY O'BOY POP'S RIGHT I MAKES THINGS RUN A Good Housekeeping ln m iui pi hi. i.iuj.i j n.i 1. miii m i. .am t I n. . : M Smoother Performonce-Dou- ble T 'Jj fi ivY Life and Greater Gas Savings i j'J-- J Enjoy these special advantages by replacing ffj """"fe. I worn-o- spark plugs with new wide-ga- p Auto- - V , cw . I Lite Resistor Spark PIubs the newest addition . ys , , S to the complete line of regular, transport, !Kass&' 'V - " J aviation, marine and model spark plugs Ignition K!r&iw Engineered by Auto-Lit- e. E"&Zt&M'' vlrw how, lh. 10.000 ohm R.iljlot which emS)'$ m permit! wider Initial gap letting! and make, these f 5y,Ste1f-- , advantage, palsible. Doubl, life under equal Condi- - VSZu' 5" tioni at compared with narrow-ga- tpork plug,. n iiinii mi nil iiiitnwinfririieimiiiiiiainniitriH-- ... ' If Reter Paiu knots you up wm lp . mnto Contains up rub in iscsvfi THE 0RI6INAL BAUME ANAL&ESIQUB fcy I 5lP(DDS(Da31EaK AFTER FOUR YEARS AWAY FROM THE y 1 FOOTBALL WARS, (INCLUDING A SHORT U f 7 M l R HITCH ON THE KOREAN BORDER,) IS V E OUT OF THE SERVICE AND READY X J Vi. I TO REPEAT HIS ROLE OF MR. OUTSIDE JtS S J jS THS TIME FOR THE LOS ANGELES RAMS. I SVij!1!!'' J LAST SUMMER WAKE FOREST COLLEGE M avlO. hfzM AND NO. CAROLINA STATE PLAYED A NINE- - JXUCt J. y w $3gJ INNING BASEBALL GAME WITH BOTH t KEJX sNA'S18, ( J TEAMS USING A MECHANICAL PITCHING V NNNERAU IN J MACHINE! FINAL SCORE WAS 8 TOO K PONN'N O I ' WITH WAKE FOREST ON THE LONG END. I) THE" cla5- 5- y THERE WERE NO BALKS AND STEALING i Of ln J iyA AGAINSVIRON MIKE" W5 BANNED yY-- BY AGREEMENT. VVV I SPORTUGHT 1 Calumet Horses Can't Win 'Em All I Bv GRANTLAND RICE PHIS HAS BEEN a rough year on champions. Notre Dame fell. Joe Louis tottered and was badly beaten. And now Calumet stable and the Jones boys are running second in the Big Money stakes after taking top honors in 1946, 1947, 1948 and 1949. Brookmeade's able stable, owned by Mrs. Dodge Sloan I tft'""s and trained by , awf.- - J Preston Burch, is tZZ, now in front with js Vanderbilt closing n ' ''in from third '1 place, f S 1 Both Calumet I 4 ,i I anii Vanderbilt ,i,.;i:,:,).4 are on their Grantland Rice way to C a 1 where the Hollywood track and Santa Anita are offer-ing a flock of purses from $100,-00- 0 to $230,000 with 510,000 and $50,000 pick-up- s scattered all over the Western Coast. At least that part bordering Los An-geles. The $230,000 purse will be for the Maturity Stake, a d af-fair where Hill Prince will be the horse to beat now that Middle-ground- 's racing career has been ended by a broken ankle. It seems impossible to realize that Calumet, is no longer at the top. You turn back and see Citation, Coaltown, Whirlaway, Armed, Ponder, Fer-vent, Two Lea, Bewitch and many, many others who have dominated the tracks from here to nowhere and back. Ben and Jimmy were dividing their big stable and were mopping up. Both are among the great train-ers and they had the horses, large-ly the offspring of Bull Lea. In 1947 Calumet piled up over $1,400,000, an all-ti- high. They won $1,269,710 in 1948 with Cita-tion and Coaltown mopping up at every track. Ponder was a big money winner in 1949, ably abetted by Coaltown, and the stable's winnings totalled But suddenly something happened. Something always happens in racing. And not al-ways for the financial best. Bull Lea suddenly quit sending those crack to the tracks who grew to be fine three-year-ol- and s. Calumet was certain Citation, rated with Man o 'War as a three-year-ol-would collect most of the gold in California last winter. I saw him run several times, but the absence from competition had taken its cut. Citation was no longer Citation and then there was Noor who would have taxed Cita-tion even at his best on the coast tracks. Citation may come back again later. So may Coaltown, who won 12 straight in 1949. Bowl Phantoms It is still much too early to start lining up the various Bowls. But you can gamble each Bowl has more than one g inspec-tor working on the job. There are now four veteran Bowls with sev-eral added attractions. The four major Bowls are the Rose, Sugar, Cotton and Orange, at Pasadena, New Orleans, Dallas and Miami. The Rose Bowl is the most uncertain of the lot. The Pacific coast champion will be in doubt for several more weeks. If Ohio State wins the Big Nine or Big Ten title, the second-be- st team will head west. The Big Nine has no outstanding delegation today. It could be Michigan, Purdue, Ohio State, Wisconsin or some other. The Big Nine is in the throes of an off year, compared to its big years in the past. California and Stan-ford still lead the west coast people with Washington close up. The Sugar Bowl at New Orleans, another 75,000 crowd-gette- is eye-ing Kentucky, Tennessee, Mary-land, Oklahoma and either Texas or S.M.TJ. As the Cotton Bowl at Dallas is banking on Texas or S.M. U., unless Rice can slip in, it ap-pears that the winner here will re-main in Texas on New Year's Day. Just at the moment the Cotton, Sugar and Orange Bowls are all watching the same teams Texas, S.M.U., Rice, Tennessee, Kentucky, Maryland, Oklahoma and any out-sider who may pop into the middle of the picture. The southwest now has more bowl entries than any other sector. What To Do? I checked last fall with graduate managers from Pennsylvania, Yale, UCLA and Southern California. Each figured television had cost them around 11,000 paid admissions each game especially each im-portant game. This was equal to a loss of $33,000 a game. They were getting $77,000 a season for tele-vision rights not nearly enough to make up the heavy deficit and keep the sport going in the schools. It may be in a few years the crowds will tire of television sets and come back to the play-ing grounds again. But as long as they are willing to bring the game to you for nothing I can't visualize huge mobs rushing out to pay for being crowded, shoved around and set down in uncomfortable seats. I'd rather have them bring it to me, than go out and look for it. Especial-ly when it's just as good. Almost everyone would rather have television except the promo-ters or owners. I STEALllflQ VALLPAFER wallpaper may BE STEAMED FOB. REMOVAL BY USING- - HOUSE -- HOLD IRON AND DAMP CLOTH FOLDED AS PAD. |